Search results
Although d'Artagnan is not able to join this elite corps immediately, he is befriended by three of the most formidable musketeers of the age – Athos, Porthos and Aramis, "the three musketeers" or "the three inseparables" – and becomes involved in affairs of state and at court.
- Alexandre Dumas
- 1844
D’Artagnan is a young man from Gascony who leaves his childhood home for Paris to become a musketeer. D’Artagnan is handsome, intelligent, and brave, which makes him a perfect candidate for M. de Tréville ’s musketeers. However, before he can become a musketeer, he must prove himself worthy.
D’Artagnan, the hero, is a Gascon, a young man who embodies in every aspect the hotheaded stereotype of the Béarnais people. Armed with only a letter of recommendation to M. de Tréville, head of King Louis XIV’s musketeers, and his prodigious skill with a sword, this incomparable youth cuts a swathe through seventeenth-century Paris and ...
D'Artagnan readily accepts Constance's request, and accompanied by the three musketeers, he begins the hazardous trip to London. On the way, they are continually ambushed by the cardinal's spies, and one by one, the musketeers are foiled from accompanying d'Artagnan to London.
D’Artagnan is the protagonist of Alexandre Dumas 's novel The Three Muskateers. He is a cadet who meets the titular group of the king's Muskateers, Athos, Porthos, and Aramis, and recounts the...
Shortly after his meeting with M. de Tréville, d’Artagnan challenges three different musketeers— Athos, Porthos, and Aramis —to a duel, not realizing any of them are friends. When d’Artagnan shows up to his duel with Athos, he is surprised to see that Athos brought Porthos and Aramis as his seconds.
People also ask
Who are the Three Musketeers in D'Artagnan?
Who wrote the Three Musketeers?
Why did d'Artagnan help the Musketeers?
Why did the Musketeers accompany the Cardinal?
Did Dumas write a sequel to 'the Three Musketeers'?
Where can I find a book about the Three Musketeers?
D’Artagnan runs to Monsieur Bonacieux and tells him to be quiet and go willingly. D’Artagnan knows that he and the musketeers will have no chance to rescue Madame Bonacieux if they attempt to fight the cardinal’s guards.